When starting up, the compositor might call wlr_output_set_mode()
with a mode which is already the current one. wlroots will detect
this and make the wlr_output_set_mode() call a no-op. During the
next wlr_output_commit() call, wlroots will perform an atomic
commit without the ALLOW_MODESET flag.
This is an issue, because some drivers need ALLOW_MODESET even if
the mode is the same. For instance, if the FB stride or modifier
changed, some drivers require a modeset.
Add a new flag "allow_artifacts" which is set when the compositor
calls mode-setting functions. Use this flag to figure out whether
we want to perform atomic commits with ALLOW_MODESET.
(The name "allow_artifacts" is picked because ALLOW_MODESET is a
misnomer, see [1].)
[1]: https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/505107/
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3499
Instead of using low-level wl_shm_buffer and wlr_dmabuf_v1_buffer
APIs, use the unified wlr_buffer APIs. That way it doesn't matter
what the exact wlr_buffer implementation is used, any which provides
the necessary capabilities (data_ptr or dmabuf) would work.
Simplifies the logic a bit, and will make the transition to wlr_shm
easier.
CTA-861-H defines a picture aspect ratio which may be attached to
each mode. This affects the way the sink will display the image.
See annexes H.1 and H.2 for examples.
See the spec at [1]. tl;dr EGL has terrible defaults: eglTerminate()
may have side-effects on completely unrelated EGLDisplay objects.
This extension allows us to opt-in to get the sane behavior:
eglTerminate() only free's our own EGLDisplay without affecting
others.
[1]: https://registry.khronos.org/EGL/extensions/KHR/EGL_KHR_display_reference.txt
wlr_buffer.c is difficult to read because it contains a mixed bag
of unrelated things: base buffer type, buffer implementations,
buffer resource factory, and client buffer.
Split each of these into their own file.
dac040f87f mistakenly renamed
xdg_surface_destroy listener, which was listening to *unmap* events, to
xdg_surface_unmap. The actual fix, however, is to listen to destroy
events. This fixes various crashes.
Previously, adaptive sync was just a hint and wouldn't make any
atomic commit fail if the backend didn't support it. The main reason
is wlr_output_test wasn't supported at the time.
Now that we have a way for compositors to test whether a change can
work, let's remove the exception for adaptive sync and convert it to
a regular output state field.
array_realloc will grow the array for the target size like wl_insert_add, but
will also shrink the array if the target size is sufficiently smaller than the
current allocation.
This lets the renderer handle the wlr_buffer directly, just like it
does in texture_from_buffer. This also allows the renderer to batch
the rectangle updates, and update more than the damage region if
desirable (e.g. too many rects), so can be more efficient.
We were firing the new_input signal on backend initialization,
before the compositor had the chance to add a listener for it.
Mimick what's done for wl_keyboard: if the backend hasn't been
started, delay wl_touch initialization.
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3473
When the client doesn't support high-resolution scroll, accumulate
deltas until we can notify a discrete event.
Some mice have a free spinning wheel, making possible to lock the wheel
when the accumulator value is not 0. To avoid synchronization issues
between the mouse wheel and the accumulators, store the last delta and
when the scroll direction changes, reset the accumulator.
On newer versions of libinput, the event LIBINPUT_EVENT_POINTER_AXIS
has been deprecated in favour of LIBINPUT_EVENT_POINTER_SCROLL_WHEEL,
LIBINPUT_EVENT_POINTER_SCROLL_FINGER and
LIBINPUT_EVENT_POINTER_SCROLL_CONTINUOUS.
Where new events are provided by the backend, ignore
LIBINPUT_EVENT_POINTER_AXIS, receive high-resolution scroll events from
libinput and emit the appropiate wlr_pointer signal.